Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/20903
Title: Adopting Antonio Gramsci’s conceptual elaboration of passive revolution to interpret economic development and education in the history of a unified Italy
Authors: Gravina, Joseph
Keywords: Education -- History -- Italy
Gramsci, Antonio, 1891-1937
Economic development -- Italy
Issue Date: 2017
Publisher: University of Malta. Faculty of Education
Citation: Gravina, J. (2017). Adopting Antonio Gramsci’s conceptual elaboration of passive revolution to interpret economic development and education in the history of a unified Italy. Malta Review of Educational Research, 11(1), 49-73.
Abstract: Antonio Gramsci adopted concepts from others only to develop them further and not necessarily along the same path as in their original context. ‘Passive revolution’ assisted Vincenzo Cuoco to explain the short-lived top down democratisation of the Neapolitan State in 1799. Gramsci generalised it to explain the Italian Risorgimento and the bourgeois state it bore. He denoted it as ‘revolution without a revolution’ in contrast with post-1789 France. Besides state formation, Gramsci enriched passive revolution by associating it with the political subterfuges of ‘transformism’ and ‘technicisation’. He experimented with the term further by expanding its historical limits to embrace the Fascist regime and, economically, Fordist inroads from across the Atlantic. This paper focuses on these (and other) fundamental stages in the narrative of the Italian political state and economic development accompanying it. Therein, the concept of hegemony – arguably Gramsci’s most evocative – is added in order to meaningfully contextualise the social formation and social relations within. In this case, a ‘negative’ reading of passive revolution portrays it as a failure of hegemonic strategy; the people are not successfully educated and absorbed within bourgeois universal values. Consequently, besides broad socio-pedagogic dynamics, the formal education institution and private institutions double their effort to educate hegemonic leadership in political and socio-economic terms. This role as expressed by the main legislative acts created by the Piedmontese, the Fascists, the Christian Democrats and one of Berlusconi’s governments is analysed in order to indicate the deliberate links set between formal education and the economy through the identification of specific goals promoted by these institutions, and, throughout, how passive revolution can assist in meaningfully explaining such developments.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/20903
ISSN: 17269725
Appears in Collections:MRER, Volume 11, Issue 1
MRER, Volume 11, Issue 1

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